[Corpora-List] 2nd CFP: HLT/NAACL-07 Workshop on Computational Approaches to Figurative Language [CORRECTED WORKSHOP URL]

Anna Feldman afeldman at ling.ohio-state.edu
Mon Nov 27 19:08:36 UTC 2006


*** Apologies for multiple copies ***

Computational Approaches to Figurative Language

Workshop in conjunction with HLT/NAACL 2007
To be held in Rochester, NY, April 26, 2007

Submission deadline: January 18, 2007

Figurative language, such as metaphor, metonymy, idioms, personification, 
simile among others, is in abundance in natural discourse. It is an effective 
apparatus to heighten effect and convey various meanings, such as humor, irony, 
sarcasm, affection, etc. Figurative language can be found not only in fiction, 
but also in everyday speech, newspaper articles, research papers, and even 
technical reports. The recognition of figurative language use and the 
computation of figurative language meaning constitute one of the hardest 
problems for a variety of natural language processing tasks, such as machine 
translation, text summarization, information retrieval, and question answering. 
Resolution of this problem involves both a solid understanding of the 
distinction between literal and non-literal language and the development of 
effective computational models that can make the appropriate semantic 
interpretation automatically.

As natural language processing moves to an unprecedented new stage, it has 
become more urgent than ever to tackle the bottleneck presented by figurative 
language. There has been an increasing amount of work in this area in the past 
few years (e.g. theoretical semantic/pragmatic analyses of non-compositional 
phenomena, research on psychological/neuro-linguistic modeling of figurative 
language comprehension and production, research on the structure of the 
lexicon, knowledge representation and figurative language comprehension, 
domain-specific figurative language detection, computational corpus studies of 
figurative language), but much more work needs to be done (e.g. large-scale 
automatic figurative language detection, automatic extraction of idioms and 
non-compositional phrases from large corpora, automatic semantic interpretation 
of figurative language, automatic figurative language generation, machine 
translation of non-literal phenomena, etc.). The goal of this workshop is to 
provide a venue for researchers in this area to inform each other and the 
natural language processing community at large of the state of the art of 
current systems and to reach a better understanding of the new issues and 
challenges that need to be tackled.

The workshop is intended to be highly interdisciplinary. We encourage the 
participation of people whose research deals with figurative language from 
different perspectives, including (but not limited to) applied linguistics, 
psychology, corpus linguistics, human-computer interaction, natural language 
processing, etc.

Topics covered by the workshop include, but are not limited to:

(1) Computational models of figurative language processing, including
     - extracting idioms and non-compositional phrases from large corpora
    - classifying metaphoric/non-metaphoric and humorous/non-humorous language 
use
    - computing non-literal meaning
    - multilingual or cross-lingual processing of figurative language
    - computational modeling of human figurative language  comprehension and 
production

(2) Psychological models of figurative language processing, including
     - figurative language comprehension
     - figurative language production
     - figurative language acquisition

(3) Corpus-driven studies of figurative language, including
     - corpus-based studies of figurative aspects of any language
     - corpus-based studies of specific linguistic cues for figurative language
     - effects of domain and genre on studies of figurative language
     - annotation of non-literal phenomena in corpora

(4) Theoretical discussions on literal and non-literal language,  including 
discussions on
     - the distinction between literal and non-literal language
     - the distinction between different types of figurative language
     - cross-linguistic differences of figurative language

(5) Lexical and ontological resources for figurative language  processing, 
including
     - representation of non-literal meaning in lexicons and ontologies
     - development of new lexical resources for figurative language processing

(6) Evaluation of figurative language processing in large-scale NLP systems, 
such as machine translation, Computer-assisted Language Learning (CALL), 
question answering, dialogue systems, etc.

The emphasis of the workshop is on computational approaches  to figurative 
language. We particularly are interested in  submissions that deal with 
figurative language in the context  of Machine Translation, Word Sense 
Disambiguation, Information  Extraction, Document Retrieval, Dialogue Systems, 
Intelligent Tutoring systems, etc.

Workshop Home Page:

http://www.purl.org/net/fa/FigLang2007/


Paper Submission:

Submissions should describe original, unpublished work.  Papers are limited to 
8 pages. Submissions should use the style files available at 
http://www.cs.rochester.edu/meetings/hlt-naacl07/styles/.  No author 
information should be included in the papers since reviewing  will be blind. 
Papers not conforming to these requirements are subject  to rejection without 
review. Papers should be submitted via START which is available here: 
http://www.softconf.com/hlt/wsfigurative/submit.html.

Important Dates:

Paper submission deadline: January 18, 2007
Notification of acceptance for papers: February 22, 2007
Camera ready papers due: March 1, 2007
Workshop Date: April 26, 2007


Organizers:

Xiaofei Lu, Penn State University, xxl13 AT psu.edu
Anna Feldman, Montclair State University, feldmana AT mail.montclair.edu


Program Committee:

Chris Brew, The Ohio State University
Afsaneh Fazly, University of Toronto, Canada
Eileen Fitzpatrick, Montclair State University
Sam Glucksberg, Princeton University
Sid Horton, Northwestern University
Diana Inkpen, University of Ottawa, Canada
Kevin Knight, USC/Information Sciences Institute
Mark Lee, The University of Birmingham, UK
Katja Markert,University of Leeds, UK
Detmar Meurers, The Ohio State University
Rada Mihalcea, University of North Texas
Andrew Ortony, Northwestern University
Wim Peters, University of Sheffield, UK
Vasile Rus, The University of Memphis
Richard Sproat, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champain
Suzanne Stevenson, University of Toronto, Canada
Carlo Strapparava, Istituto per la Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica, Trento, 
Italy




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